* Customizing HTTP headers in the config file
* Add changelog, fix bad imports
* fixing some bugs
* fixing interaction of custom headers and /ui
* Defining a member in core to set custom response headers
* missing additional file
* Some refactoring
* Adding automated tests for the feature
* Changing some error messages based on some recommendations
* Incorporating custom response headers struct into the request context
* removing some unused references
* fixing a test
* changing some error messages, removing a default header value from /ui
* fixing a test
* wrapping ResponseWriter to set the custom headers
* adding a new test
* some cleanup
* removing some extra lines
* Addressing comments
* fixing some agent tests
* skipping custom headers from agent listener config,
removing two of the default headers as they cause issues with Vault in UI mode
Adding X-Content-Type-Options to the ui default headers
Let Content-Type be set as before
* Removing default custom headers, and renaming some function varibles
* some refacotring
* Refactoring and addressing comments
* removing a function and fixing comments
* Allow max request size to be user-specified
This turned out to be way more impactful than I'd expected because I
felt like the right granularity was per-listener, since an org may want
to treat external clients differently from internal clients. It's pretty
straightforward though.
This also introduces actually using request contexts for values, which
so far we have not done (using our own logical.Request struct instead),
but this allows non-logical methods to still get this benefit.
* Switch to ioutil.ReadAll()
* Redo the API client quite a bit to make the behavior of NewClient more
predictable and add locking to make it safer to use with Clone() and if
multiple goroutines for some reason decide to change things.
Along the way I discovered that currently, the x/net/http2 package is
broke with the built-in h2 support in released Go. For those using
DefaultConfig (the vast majority of cases) this will be a non-event.
Others can manually call http2.ConfigureTransport as needed. We should
keep an eye on commits on that repo and consider more updates before
release. Alternately we could go back revisions but miss out on bug
fixes; my theory is that this is not a purposeful break and I'll be
following up on this in the Go issue tracker.
In a few tests that don't use NewTestCluster, either for legacy or other
reasons, ensure that http2.ConfigureTransport is called.
* Use tls config cloning
* Don't http2.ConfigureServer anymore as current Go seems to work properly without requiring the http2 package
* Address feedback